Archive for July 4, 2025

July 4, 2025

Posted: July 4, 2025 in Uncategorized

To my American friends. I know I’m not supposed to care this much. I’m Canadian. I should turn off the news, shrug my shoulders, and tell myself it’s not my fight. I should roll my eyes at your politics, scoff at the fireworks, and say, “If you’re really going to hand it all over to one man, then you’re on your own.”

But I can’t. Because what happens to you doesn’t stay within your borders. Because every tremor in Washington sends aftershocks across the world. And because, whether I like it or not, your country is still tethered to mine, economically, culturally, diplomatically. When America sneezes, Canada gets pneumonia. And right now, it feels like you’ve got a full-blown democratic hemorrhage.

So when I see you gearing up for another Fourth of July, red, white and blue streamers, hot dogs, parades, and speeches about liberty, I can’t help but feel the world tilt a little more off its axis.

So what exactly are you celebrating? Freedom? Independence? From what? From facts? From institutions? From your own damn Constitution?

I grew up admiring the United States. The scale of it. The confidence. The belief in ideas bigger than one person. But somewhere along the way, something got hollowed out. The flag is still flying, sure, but it’s covering something dark, and decaying fast.

This past week was proof. A giant, flashing billboard that read: ‘We’re not even pretending anymore.’ I watched members of Congress and Senate, elected to serve the people, fold like cheap lawn chairs under the weight of one man’s threats. I saw backroom deals crafted not in the interest of Americans, but to secure loyalty, silence dissent, and grease the machinery of a government increasingly run by fear, not policy.

That wasn’t compromise. That wasn’t negotiation. That was hostage-taking. And then the bill passed. A bill that carved out billions, not for schools or healthcare or housing, but to help faciliate immigration detention and other tools of control. You tell me: who did that bill serve? Did it serve a single mother in Ohio? A veteran in Arizona? A teacher in Georgia? No. It served power. Consolidated, corrosive power.

And now, as the smoke clears from the Capitol, you light up the sky with fireworks in celebration. The contrast is staggering.

You don’t need to hear this from me, but maybe it matters more because I’m not American. I’m watching from across the border trying to process how the country that prides itself on freedom of speech is silencing journalists. How the country that fights wars in the name of democracy is dismantling its own. How the country that invented the phrase checks and balances now seems to believe that loyalty to one man outweighs the rule of law.

It’s like watching someone burn down their own house and throw a block party in the front yard while the roof collapses behind them.

After Nov 6th I took a break. I had to. From the headlines. From the outrage fatigue. I turned it off. Stopped watching the cable carnage and disappeared into a haze of documentaries and crime series, because those felt less disturbing than reality.

But when our Canadian federal election kicked into gear, I plugged back in. And what I saw this past week snapped me out of every last shred of numbness. Because you can only tell yourself it can’t get worse so many times before you realize, it already has.

And so, I ask: What exactly is the Fourth of July this year? A celebration of what’s been preserved? Or a distraction from what’s been destroyed? Maybe patriotism isn’t what I thought it was. In Canada, we’ve often looked at American pride and felt like we lacked something. We don’t pledge allegiance. We don’t sing our national anthem in every school. We’re quieter. Less performative. But now I think maybe I’ve misunderstood it. Maybe patriotism isn’t about pageantry. Maybe it’s about protecting what matters even when it’s not convenient. Maybe it’s about asking hard questions, even when the answers are ugly.

Because let me tell you something uncomfortable: tyrants don’t destroy democracies alone. They need help. They need people to stay silent. They need people to rationalize. So no, I won’t be celebrating with you. But I won’t look away either. Because deep down, I still want to believe that enough of you are wide awake. That you see it. That you feel the fire under your feet. That you know the difference between real freedom and manufactured consent.

And if you don’t? Then this isn’t a holiday. It’s a funeral with fireworks.

July 2, 2025

Posted: July 4, 2025 in Uncategorized

Canada’s model for health care is the envy of the world. In the U.S. Donald Trump is tearing theirs apart and Alberta has a leader that supports the American model. Millions of Americans just lost access to basic coverage under Donald Trump’s so-called “big beautiful bill.” And I can’t stop thinking about it, because I know exactly what it means when a health system works… and when it doesn’t.

This is a very short version of a very long story. There were dark nights, painful setbacks, near-deaths, and small mercies. I make it sound neat here, but it wasn’t. Not even close. Still, you’ll get the gist.

Of course we have had our share of emergency visits and surgeries over the years but our family’s medical journey escalated in 2020, before covid vaccines, when my healthy husband, at only 55, was hospitalized with COVID. He survived, barely, but that moment marked a turning point. His health was never quite the same again.

In October 2022, we were hit again, this time, far harder. He had been feeling unwell for months, and finally, he collapsed. Scans showed masses across nearly all his abdominal organs: liver, pancreas, spleen, gallbladder, colon. A palliative care doctor told us it was likely terminal metastatic cancer. “Prepare for end of life,” they said. But within a day, chemistry results revised the diagnosis: Aggressive High Grade Diffuse Large B-cell Lymphoma stage 4. It wasn’t good news, but better than originally thought.
Chemotherapy began immediately and the treatment nearly killed him. There were two drug-resistant staph infections, kidney failure from antibiotic toxicity, pulmonary embolisms, and malnutrition.

Aggressive chemotherapy continued and by April the grapefruit-sized tumors had shrunk to the size of walnuts. Some were gone altogether. He was sick from chemo, his 6’1 body weighed just 135 lbs but he was alive.

Then in March 2024, our youngest son, just in his twenties, with a career dependent on his eyesight, woke up with almost no vision in one eye. His optometrist saw him immediately and diagnosed a retinal detachment. Within 15 minutes, we were rushing to a retinal surgeon, one of the best in the country, on-call that day by chance. Five hours later, he was in surgery. The surgeon chose a more painful but more effective technique to preserve his vision, because he understood what was at stake for a young man whose eyes are his livelihood. There was no invoice. No haggling. No deductible. Just… care.

Then just 8 weeks later, June 2024, and we nearly lost my husband again. He’d been working outside in the heat, still thin and depleted from his cancer ordeal. He collapsed. No pulse. No breath. Cardiac arrest.

Our son, still recovering from eye surgery was home. His training from the Canadian Armed Forces kicked in. He began CPR immediately. EMS arrived in 9 minutes. Firefighters shortly after. Forty minutes passed with no signs of life. They were preparing to call his death.

And then… a gasp. Once at hospital he was intubated, placed in a medically induced coma, and against all odds, he woke up days later, dazed but intact. Only 10% of out-of-hospital cardiac arrests end in survival. Almost none after 40 minutes. He beat the odds, because of immediate CPR, and because our system responded.

Since then, he has had several cardiac procedures, including the installation of a cardiac device that will assist his heart if it fails again. And the system continues to hold him. There are still follow-ups. Still supports. Still care.

I’ve said many times: I was able to fight for my family because I’m resource-driven, maybe a little relentless, and am English first language. That matters. It shouldn’t, but it does. I could push, research, ask the right questions, and advocate. But even with those advantages, I still marvel that we got what we did, because I’ve seen what happens in countries where people don’t.

During this time I joined many online support groups, for cancer, cardiac arrest, retinal detachment. I’ve met people from around the world. Some in developing nations, yes. But what shocked me most were the stories from Americans.

People denied life-saving surgery because of co-pays. Young people going blind because of insurance loopholes. People dying because they couldn’t afford the heart devices.

This isn’t anecdotal. This is systemic.

The United States is not failing at health care, it is succeeding at a system that was never built to care for everyone in the first place.

It brags about innovation while millions are locked out. It sells the dream of opportunity while robbing people of the basic chance to survive.

Here in Canada, we complain about hallway medicine and long waits, and we should. We need to keep fighting for improvement. But we must never forget the alternative. Because when cancer attacked my husband we were treated without question. When he flatlined for 40 minutes, they brought him back. When my son’s vision was slipping away, they saved it.

All of that happened because we live in a country where health care is a right, not a privilege. Doctors have told us that the health care costs for the past 5 years would have been between 4.5 and 5 million for what is some of the most expensive and resource intensive care our system offers. And our family didn’t have to decide between treatment and bankrupcy.

So no, I won’t stay quiet while Trump guts another piece of his country’s safety net and I won’t pretend Canada doesn’t have something worth defending here.

I am terrified for the millions of Americans now left without care, watching their lives shrink to the size of a co-pay. And I am profoundly grateful to live in a country where health care, however imperfect, is still based on need, not net worth. And don’t be fooled, Alberta, Danielle Smith is dragging us in that direction, and far too many are nodding along. We should be strengthening public care, not selling it off piece by piece.

June 30, 2025

Posted: July 4, 2025 in Uncategorized

There’s a trade-off for putting my opinions out into the world, and my family has made it very clear: no images, no specifics. That’s the boundary. And I respect it. So instead, I post what I can, like this photo of me, messy hair and all, sitting on the Canada 150 F-18 sitting on the tarmac in Yellowknife on July 1, 2017. That jet? That sky? That’s where so much of my pride lives anyway. Aviation. Military service. It’s the country I love.

I wasn’t going to write another Canada Day post. But here we are on the edge of something. A moment in my life, a moment for our country, and a moment for the world. It’s all pressing in. And somehow, that photo, wild and imperfect, captures exactly what I’m feeling: reverence, pride, tension, and the ache of transition.

Because this isn’t just about celebration. It’s also about decision. Last night, Prime Minister Mark Carney made the call to hold back the digital services tax (DSA). Some are calling it a climbdown. I call it strategy.

Was it a revenue loss? Yes. But sometimes you make a decision to abort a landing and do a go around. The U.S. under Trump is playing hardball. Carney knew that. We all should’ve known that. And as I said in my post a few days ago protecting Canadian jobs, from autos to aluminum might mean stepping back on the DSA for now. That tax was always a card to play. And he played it.

Not weakly. Wisely.

Some of you voted for Carney because of climate, or housing, or health care. And I support those things too. But many of us, especially those of us watching the geopolitical weather patterns, voted for him because we knew he could handle the chaos from the south. And now, in real time, he is. Steady hands, sharp mind, no bluster.

The other side of July 1st is where things get real. We’ll see if the trade talks hold. We’ll see if Trump escalates. We’ll see if calm can prevail. But I know this: we’re not rudderless. We’ve got someone who understands the game, sees the next moves, and refuses to let Canada get steamrolled.

I look out over blue skies today and think of the last hundred years. Not just the image of that centennial jet, but the men in my family who flew and fought before me. We are nearing the 100th anniversary of the start of World War II. And somehow, that history is humming under everything right now. The stakes feel high because they are. For our economy. For our democracy. For our future.

And that’s why I posted the photo. Not because it’s perfect—but because it’s real. Because it’s mine. And because it reminds me of what we’re trying to hold onto in this moment.

Hold the line, this flight’s not over, and the storm isn’t done circling.

June 30, 2025 NDM

June 28, 2025

Posted: July 4, 2025 in Uncategorized

UPDATE-June 30-From below-(“The digital tax, while important, isn’t on the same level as autos, steel, or critical trade infrastructure. That makes it a useful card, not a dealbreaker, but a chip worth playing.”) It looks like PM Carney played his card last night!

This one’s for my fellow Canadians, and for my American friends peeking over the fence to see what this tech tax is all about.This Tuesday, July 1st, marks Canada’s 158th birthday. And while the fireworks and face paint will be out in full force, I’ll be keeping it simple. I’ll be sitting with my own gratitude. Gratitude for having had the privilege, not the luxury, the privilege, of visiting or living in every province and territory in this country. Not just flying over, not just ticking a box, but really being there. From ferry terminals in Newfoundland to frozen airstrips in Nunavut, to the shores of Vancouver Island and yes, even downtown Winnipeg in February. That’s not a brag. That’s a love story.

Because once you’ve seen this country, really seen it, you don’t just understand Canada. You feel it in your bones. And maybe that’s why I take it personally when a human thundercloud from the south decides to try and muscle us around on the eve of our national holiday.

Enter Donald J. Trump, stage far-right, with a Friday afternoon meltdown that absolutely no one asked for. In his infinite insecurity, Trump announced, from his personal echo chamber, Truth Social, that he is suspending all trade negotiations with Canada. Why? Because Canada is implementing a Digital Services Tax.

Let’s be clear: this isn’t a tariff. It’s a 3% tax on massive digital platforms such as Google, Meta, Amazon, and X. Any digital platform provider that makes more than $20 million annually from Canadian users is subject to the tax. The law has been in the works for years, passed through Parliament, and delayed only while countries debated a global approach. First payments are due June 30th, and it’s retroactive to 2022. So no, this wasn’t sudden. It was scheduled.

Why the outburst now? Because someone in Northern California, maybe Zuckerberg, maybe another tech billionaire who isn’t used to paying tax anywhere, picked up the phone. And Trump, never one to miss a cue from a donor, did what he does best: threw a fit. Probably exacerbated because he’s stuck in D.C. this weekend trying to pass his ‘Big Beautiful Bill’ with no golf cart in sight and needed something, anything, to distract from a week of complicated headlines.

But here’s what Trump didn’t mention: this tax reflects the modern reality of global commerce. We’re not taxing wheat, we’re taxing clicks, targeted ads, and e-commerce platforms profiting off Canadians. It’s not specific to the U.S.-if Musk moves his head office to South Africa it will still apply. It just happens that these companies are mostly based in the U.S. And for the record, 11 U.S. states already have digital taxes of their own. So let’s not pretend Canada is doing something radical. France, the UK, Italy, Spain, they’ve already done it. We’re just finally collecting.

This isn’t about punishing America. It’s about fairness. Big Tech earns billions here. They should pay their share here. Trump’s tantrum is less about principle and more about protecting his billion-dollar buddies who’d rather pay lawyers than taxes.

Let’s also not forget: this wasn’t a surprise. His administration, trade lawyers, industry groups, everyone knew the June 30th deadline was coming. So no, this isn’t shock. It’s theatre.

And here’s where Mark Carney enters, cool, steady, fluent in global finance. While Trump blasts all caps into the ether, Carney might be quietly playing the long game. The digital tax, while important, isn’t on the same level as autos, steel, or critical trade infrastructure. That makes it a useful card, not a dealbreaker, but a chip worth playing.

Trump claims he holds all the cards. Maybe not this one. And let’s not forget: this wasn’t Carney’s policy. The digital tax was promised under the last government and kept in motion by the Finance Minister. But if Carney’s playing it smart, which I believe he is, then this timing might be less a problem and more a quiet opportunity. He doesn’t need to bellow. He just needs to hold firm.

No, I’m not panicked. I’m annoyed. Because this isn’t a real crisis, it’s a Friday fit from a guy who got a phone call and couldn’t go golfing. And while Trump’s trying to stir up a trade war over three percent, the rest of us are just trying to enjoy a long weekend and maybe catch a few rays and roast a few hot dogs.

And as I write this I am reminded that my summer holidays may never again include the U.S. Out of principle primarily but maybe a bit out of fear. If I handed over my phone and someone scrolled through what I’ve written about Trump, I’d either be detained, deported, or returned to sender with a sticky note that reads “Do not admit.”. And frankly, for now at least my travel dollars are better spent here, on Canadian soil, in Canadian communities, under skies that, for all our challenges, still feel like home.

So Happy Canada Day weekend. You beautiful, complicated, quietly confident country. We’ve got work to do, yes. But we’ve also got decency, intelligence, and a government that speaks for the people.

And to our southern neighbours: we hear you. We’re watching, we’re hoping, and we know that somewhere underneath the noise, you’re trying to hold on to something good, just like we are. So as we head into Canada Day, we’ll be raising our glasses, lighting our fires, and feeling pretty damn proud of this country that, despite its flaws, is still worth fighting for. And while I won’t be at your party on July 4th, consider this your invitation to ours.

We’ve got room for reason, not for rage. Canada’s 158th birthday starts now. Come by for the lakes, the laughter, and the decency. And while we may want to tax your tech billionaires, we don’t plan to read your texts or seize your phone at the border. We’re Canadian, not paranoid.

June 27, 2025

Posted: July 4, 2025 in Uncategorized

Alberta feels like America’s northern cousin. The one with a chip on its shoulder.

Let’s go back to something I say often: I live in Alberta. I raised my children here. I’ll likely die here. And I don’t say that with resignation, I say it with a weird mix of gratitude and grief.

This is a province gifted, yes, gifted, with oil and gas riches that changed its destiny. But Alberta today doesn’t act like a province that hit the resource jackpot. It acts like the bratty kid who inherited a trust fund and now blames everyone else for his lack of character.

So let’s rewind the tape. Alberta became it’s own province in 1905, carved out of the Northwest Territories. Our early settlers were tough as nails immigrants from Eastern and Western Europe who came to farm the land. And it wasn’t easy. The soil was thin, the weather was cruel, and the wind never shut up. Farming here was never a fairytale. You had to work for every single bushel, and even then, it might blow away

Then came the 1930s. Drought hit. Crops failed. Families starved. My own family has photos from P.E.I., trucks full of potatoes headed west because Albertans were hungry. Not for profit. For survival. When Alberta was on its knees, other Canadians fed us. Let’s remember that before we shout about “equalization” and “economic tyranny.”

Although oil was initially found in 1914 it didn’t gush until the ’50s. And with that came money. Landmen came knocking. Farmers became royalty owners. And slowly but surely, the persona changed. We began to believe that wealth was our destiny. That we were owed.

Enter: Danielle Smith. Premier of grievance. Queen of magical thinking. The folksy voice of rebellion, denial, and “common sense”, if common sense means conspiracies and suing hospitals. She has her own version of Trump’s “I alone can fix it” mantra, though in her case, it’s more like “Ottawa broke it, I’ll pretend to fix it, and we’ll sue someone in the process.”

And just like Trump, she’s mastered the political art of distraction. The moment things get real, out come the shiny objects: provincial policing, a separate pension plan, another tantrum about Ottawa mistreating Alberta. It’s nonsense. It’s theatre

Dammit, we need to get over this. Alberta isn’t a victim. We are a unique province, as is every province. That’s the whole point of Canada. New Brunswick doesn’t have oil sands. Manitoba doesn’t have mountains. Saskatchewan doesn’t have tidewater. Alberta doesn’t either, which, by the way, is why we keep fighting for access. The strength of this country has never come from pretending we’re the centre of the universe. It’s come from working together. From resilience. From interdependence.

And I am damn sick of Danielle Smith making us sound like we’re anything less than Canadian.

The UCP? They clap like Maple MAGA marionettes. They mangle facts. They pretend private health care isn’t creeping in. They sell choice like it’s freedom, while cutting public services in the back room. And they act like Alberta’s wealth emerged from thin air, not from the collective efforts of thousands of workers, federal infrastructure, and yes, partnerships across this country.

I’m not anti-Alberta. I am Alberta. I’ve driven the back roads. I’ve served in elected roles and participated in more town halls and community meetings then I can count. The oil and gas industry helped support my family. But I also know what it means to count on the rest of the country.

And now I see my grandchild (I know I talk about her all the time-I’m kind of smitten) entering a world where we’re teaching the next generation that blame is a birthright and victimhood is a political strategy. I didn’t sign up for that Alberta.

Because here’s the thing: we’re still a province. We are not a sovereign nation. We’re not a global power. We are not the United States, though increasingly we’re showing their worst habits. A Premier who thinks she’s smarter than scientists. A party that worships her no matter how absurd the claim. A public so exhausted, we’re starting to tune out, which is exactly the plan.

So yes, I’m watching Alberta lose itself. I’m watching good people buy the snake oil again. I’m watching this Premier act like this is her province, her movement, her right. And I’m here to say: no, it’s not.

This is a country. And it’s not hers. It’s ours. So let’s not be the buffalo herded toward the edge, misled, confused, and sacrificed.
Because make no mistake: the cliff is real. And the drums are already beating.

June 24, 2025

Posted: July 4, 2025 in Uncategorized

UPDATE- Early U.S. intelligence suggests Iran’s nuclear program has only been set back by a few months, a sobering reminder that you can bomb facilities, but you can’t bomb knowledge. Iran’s scientists, domestic supply chains, and technical capacity remain intact. Without access for IAEA inspectors, it’s anyone’s guess where that 60%-enriched uranium is now, or what its future holds. And for those cheering for regime change, be careful what you wish for. This is a theocracy, not a failed state. Sometimes, it’s better the devil you know than the one you don’t, especially when centrifuges are still spinning in the dark.*

I want to say this as clearly as I can. Donald Trump is about to walk into the NATO Summit like he just handed the world peace on a platter. Like this “ceasefire” is some kind of masterstroke of diplomacy. Like he deserves a Nobel Prize and a standing ovation.

Well, I’m not clapping.

Because I have a son who serves in the Canadian Armed Forces. He wears the uniform, and we are part of NATO. This isn’t abstract for me. This isn’t a campaign speech or a headline. It’s personal. It’s real. And what Trump does or doesn’t do on the world stage has direct consequences for the people I love.

So when I hear that there’s a ceasefire in the Middle East, I don’t breathe easy, I brace. Because this isn’t peace. This is a pause. A tactical timeout so both sides can reload and regroup. We don’t know what was promised. We don’t know who guaranteed what. And quite frankly, there is no reason in hell to believe that Netanyahu or the Ayatollah suddenly discovered diplomacy. These are two men who have repeatedly shown that they will manipulate global moments to serve their own survival, their own power, and their own narrative.

If this were truly a peace process, Iran would be welcoming IAEA inspectors through the front gates right now. They’d be handing over the uranium that got trucked out of the nuclear facility before the bombings. Instead? Silence. Deflection. And from both Iran and Israel this morning, a mutual shrug about “mistakes” made after the ceasefire was announced. Come on. These are not mistakes. These are deliberate moves.

We are still waiting on the BDA, the battle damage assessment, to tell us what was actually hit, and what was conveniently left untouched. Iran still has the means to produce nuclear weapons. That didn’t vanish in 12 days of airstrikes. Tunnels weren’t destroyed. Centrifuge facilities are still operational. Material is still unaccounted for. These aren’t strategic victories. These are PR Band-Aids.

Meanwhile, Trump wants a trophy. He’s not thinking about what’s still smoldering underground, he’s already drafting his Nobel speech.

Seriously! Iran hasn’t changed. Their core ambitions remain, to dominate the region, push the U.S. out of the Middle East, and deny Israel’s right to exist. And Israel, under Netanyahu, hasn’t changed either. He’s playing a long game, and right now, his grip on power is as much a motivation as any strategic objective.

So no, I don’t find this reassuring. If centuries of Middle East conflict could be resolved in a two-week news cycle, we’d have peace in our time every other Friday. But we don’t. Because this isn’t over. It’s not even close.

And I need to say something that’s been burning in me for days: Donald Trump talks about regime change like it’s a reality show plot twist. But he doesn’t seem to understand the people of Iran, who follow their Ayatollah with unshakable devotion. Just like the rest of the world can’t understand how tens of millions of Americans have become completely untethered from reality and follow him like he’s a messiah. You want to understand the Ayatollah’s grip on Iran? Take a good long look in the mirror, America.

The MAGA base and the followers of the Ayatollah aren’t that different. Blind loyalty. No questions. Absolute belief. And when you base global strategy on your inability to understand that… people die.

I didn’t grow up imagining that my son would be serving under these conditions, where political theatre masquerades as international policy, and nuclear silence is somehow supposed to comfort us. But here we are. He puts on his kit and steps into the world not knowing what lies ahead, because decisions made in air-conditioned rooms by men like Trump echo in real lives.

So no, I’m not here for Trump’s travelling peace circus. I’m here because I come from a family that serves. Because I understand what NATO is. Because I know what it’s meant to protect us from. And while Trump plays messiah on the NATO stage, draped in ego and spray tan, the rest of us are left praying his next delusion doesn’t light the world on fire.

NATO was built from the rubble of a world war, by people who knew what happens when fascism goes unchecked and strongmen start believing their own mythology. It wasn’t built for photo ops. It was built to stop history from repeating itself.

But here we are. Watching a man who dodged the draft and worships autocrats pretend he is a peace broker. This isn’t peace. It’s theatre and I don’t know what the next act will be.

June 23, 2025

Posted: July 4, 2025 in Uncategorized

This Isn’t the World I Was Meant to Live In! I’ve been sitting here for hours trying to process what just happened, and what might come next, and the truth is, I can’t. No one can. Not the experts, not the analysts, not the generals being dragged onto cable news to make sense of it. Because this isn’t predictable anymore. It’s not strategy. It’s chaos. And it’s terrifying.

I don’t write this lightly. I’ve been watching global events closely for most of my life, and I can tell you, this moment is different. What happened over the weekend, and what’s happening now, has put every one of us in a different kind of danger. And I feel it in my chest.

Yes, NATO came out and said that the United States did not break international law by bombing Iran. That’s what the lawyers have decided. But let’s be honest, that doesn’t make it right. That doesn’t make it smart. And it sure as hell doesn’t mean the world is safer. The only thing that ruling confirms is that the bar has moved so low, we’re now just relieved when something isn’t technically a war crime.

And here’s what’s happened since: Iran responded with 10 missiles, targeting U.S. military bases in Qatar and Iraq, with most aimed at the Air Force base in Qatar. But here’s what matters, the Americans were warned. They knew the missiles were coming. There was an evacuation. No casualties. No destruction. Just precision without intent to kill. A message, not a massacre.

Ten missiles, just like the U.S. dropped on Iran. Symmetry in firepower, restraint in aim. Will Iran create global economic instability by closing the Strait of Hormuz. It’s not war, not yet. But it’s a line in the sand, and the wind is picking up.

We still don’t even know the full extent of the damage from the original U.S. strike. A Battle Damage Assessment (BDA) is underway and will take days. But it doesn’t matter what’s in the final report. I already feel the damage. To diplomacy. To trust. To global stability.

And then there’s this: 400 pounds of enriched uranium is gone. Missing. Do you understand what that means? It doesn’t take a nuclear warhead to devastate a city. It takes ambition. It takes desperation. And it takes exactly what we’ve got: chaos, and the loss of any shared rules of engagement.

Iran is not a fringe state. It’s 92 million people. They know their pain is a pawn. And no, that’s not me excusing the Iranian regime. It’s me recognizing that bombing people into democracy has never worked. It radicalizes. It hardens. It justifies the worst voices in the room.

And while the West gasps at the fallout, Russia and China are watching, smirking. Putin doesn’t respect Trump, he plays him. Xi Jinping doesn’t consider Trump an ally, he sees a destabilizer who distracts the world while Beijing tightens its grip.

But let’s go back to where this started. In 2015, there was a deal. The JCPOA. It wasn’t perfect, but it was holding. Iran’s nuclear program was under control. Enrichment was limited. Inspectors had access. And then Donald Trump torched it in 2018, because it didn’t have his name on it.

And now we’re here. Not at full war. But not at peace either.

The NATO Summit is coming, and I keep reminding myself: there will be rational voices in that room. Not all of them. But enough. I want to believe that some of those leaders will rise to the moment, will speak hard truths and force the conversation that needs to happen.

Will Trump storm out when he doesn’t get the applause he craves? Or will he double down on his old song, the one where America’s doing all the “heavy lifting” and everyone else better pay up?

I don’t know. But this will be a critical NATO Summit, just like the G7 was. Because every gathering of world leaders right now carries weight. Every table matters. We are literally and figuratively on fire. And so I’ll post this with the image it deserves: a picture of our world burning. Because that’s what we’re watching.

And I still believe, just barely, that someone in that room will have the courage to try and put the fire out. My grandfather fought in the mud. My father flew through smoke and flak. They never met my granddaughter, but she was the reason. And now the sky they cleared is dark again.

June 22, 2025

Posted: July 4, 2025 in Uncategorized

There Will Be Wars… and Rumours of Wars. The latest strikes on Iran are hard to process. The headlines are loud, the facts are murky, and the implications are overwhelming. And when something this consequential happens, all the unresolved threads of Middle East conflict start pulling at you again.

In a recent post, someone commented, and rightly so, that support for the Jewish people does not equate to support for Netanyahu or the current Israeli government. That distinction matters more than ever. I will not let criticism of government policy be misread as religious bias. I am not an anti-Semite. I am deeply critical of Benjamin Netanyahu, his decisions, his alliances, and the direction he’s taken Israel. That’s not anti-Israel, and it’s certainly not anti-Jewish.

I believe in the right of Israel to exist and for its people to live in peace, just as I do for Palestinians, Iranians, and everyone else caught in the crossfire of leaders too comfortable with war.

The line that keeps echoing for me is from Matthew in the New Testament: There will be wars and rumours of wars. The words have been lifted out of context many times, but whether in or out, they are bouncing around inside my head as I write this. Because this doesn’t feel like resolution, it feels like escalation.

I’m over 65, and I have never known a time where the Middle East wasn’t unraveling, exploding, or bracing for the next round. These aren’t just ancient rivalries. They’re modern power struggles, religious, yes, but also territorial, economic, and strategic. The horror in Gaza, the attacks on Israel October 7th, 2023, the suffering of Palestinians, the strikes in Lebanon, and now Iran.

This latest strike appears to be about nuclear capability. Does Iran have nuclear weapons? No. Do they have uranium enrichment? Yes. Is it legal? That depends on the level, oversight, and agreements, the details that only diplomats can fully parse. The rest of us are left piecing together news and opinion, trying to make sense of it.

Let me be clear: the world is better off without Iran having nuclear weapons. That much I believe. But anyone who tells you they know what happens next is lying, or delusional. Because no one knows. And that’s what makes it so dangerous. One thing seems likely: this will set Iran back, but not for long. Without real diplomacy, enrichment will resume. So who has the ear of the Ayatollah? Anyone? If not, what’s the actual long-term plan?

Kareem Sadjadpour, senior fellow at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace and one of the most respected analysts on Iran, said something tonight that hit hard:
“What happened tonight could either entrench the regime or hasten its demise. More likely to open a new chapter than to end it.” To me, that’s not hopeful. It’s foreboding. Sadjadpour is known for balance, not alarmism. If he’s bracing for something worse, then so am I.

The United States did not have a direct threat to their land. Even if this strike was “necessary,” even if it checks the box of “right thing to do,” I’m not sure it was the right country to do it. And if it was, I’m deeply troubled by who made the decision.

Donald Trump launched this strike without Congressional approval. No vote. No oversight. Just one man who ordered unilateral military action in one of the most volatile regions on earth. That’s not statesmanship. That’s a man with a god complex playing God with global consequences. That’s not democratic power. That’s something much darker.

According to the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), there is currently no verified evidence that Iran possesses a nuclear weapon. However, uranium enrichment levels have reached just under 60%, a serious concern, but still well below the 90% threshold for weapons-grade material. It’s worth remembering that under the 2015 JCPOA, brokered in part by President Obama, enrichment was effectively capped and strictly monitored, and the IAEA reported full compliance up until Trump unilaterally withdrew from the deal in 2018. Since then, Iran has steadily escalated its nuclear activity. So the question becomes: what triggered what? Was it Iranian aggression that unraveled diplomacy , or the collapse of diplomacy that accelerated Iran’s nuclear ambition? Either way, the agreement is gone, enrichment is up, and we’re now living with the fallout.

And now the questions come. Will this embolden Trump? Will Netanyahu strike again? Will Iran retaliate? Will this spin into something even worse?

Because right now, it feels like a dangerous new drama is unfolding, starring two very dangerous men: one in a long robe, the other in a long red tie.

And if that doesn’t terrify you, it should.

June 20, 2025

Posted: July 4, 2025 in Uncategorized

UPDATE to todays OP. Bill C-5 has now passed final reading in the House, with both sections, one tackling interprovincial trade barriers and the other fast-tracking major project approvals, receiving enough support to move forward. The trade portion sailed through with near-unanimous support, while the more contentious infrastructure powers cleared thanks to Conservative backing. The bill now heads to the Senate, which has signaled it will complete its review by June 27, meeting Mark Carney’s campaign promise to deliver a unified Canadian economy by Canada Day. This ia a rare moment of actual momentum in a country that usually needs a decade to build a damn bridge.

________________________________________________________________________It’s time to review Bill C-5: One Canadian Economy Act-The Good The Bad and The Ugly! Not necessarily fun reading but this bill could pass today so let’s educate ourselves a bit.

Let’s be honest, this is one of the most important and complicated pieces of legislation Canada has seen in a long time. It’s bold. It’s overdue. And yes, it’s a little terrifying. There’s a lot to admire. A lot to worry about. And a whole lot of potential to either bring this country together, or pave it over in the name of progress. So let’s talk about it.

This bill is Mark Carney’s attempt to stitch together a fragmented economic map, to bridge regional divides, unlock internal trade, streamline permitting, and finally build the kind of energy and transportation infrastructure that connects Canadians instead of pitting us against each other.

It’s not just a corridor plan. It’s a full economic pivot. And it could reshape how we move, trade, build, and power this country for the next generation. But if we’ve learned anything, it’s that big national projects come with even bigger risks, especially if they’re pushed through with “efficiency” as the excuse to bulldoze environmental or Indigenous concerns.

Because make no mistake: if this bill steamrolls rights, waters down climate protections, or becomes a playground for deregulated ambition, it will fail. Full stop. And we’ll be left cleaning up the mess with fewer protections, less trust, and no credibility.

Carney’s pitch is strong: “We will grow our economy and reduce emissions by investing in clean energy, resilient infrastructure, and Canadian innovation, proving that climate action is economic action.” And I believe he means it. He spent years at the Bank of England sounding the alarm on the financial risk of climate change while others hit snooze. His role at Brookfield Asset Management wasn’t to profit from pollution, it was to help steer one of the world’s biggest asset managers toward ESG goals that actually meant something.

But good intentions don’t build trust. And Canada has had its fill of “consultation” that starts after the permits are approved.

Carney’s platform made a critical promise: “Reconciliation means a new nation-to-nation relationship grounded in trust, respect, and the recognition of rights. Projects must be built with, not for, Indigenous Peoples.” That has to be more than a campaign line. It must survive legal translation, regulatory execution, and political pressure. It has to shape the spine of C-5, not just its talking points.

And let’s be real, First Nations, Métis, and Inuit leaders know exactly what real partnership looks like. As the Indigenous Clean Energy Social Enterprise said: “True economic sovereignty for Indigenous Peoples means equity, ownership, and leadership, not tokenistic consultation after the deals are done.” That’s the bar. If C-5 doesn’t meet it, we’re just repeating history with better branding.

Now, I want this to work. I want to believe in this bill. And I want to believe in Mark Carney, not because I trust any politician blindly, but because I’ve seen enough empty promises in my lifetime to spot the ones that still carry some weight.

And maybe you’re wondering why I’m so invested in this. Here’s the truth: I’ve seen how resource-based economies rise and fall. I live a in places where pipelines aren’t just political symbols, they are paycheques, lifelines, the reason families hold on. My husband spent decades consulting in oil and gas. I’ve stood in both camps: one foot in the industrial economy, the other in the reality that we can’t keep doing it this way forever.

But I’ve also lived long enough to know that transitions, real ones, don’t come with easy buttons. They need leadership, courage, and a deep respect for the people and the land that have carried this country on their backs.

And that land? I’ve seen it change. I lived and worked north of 60 in the early 1980s, long before “climate crisis” was a headline. When I returned in 2017 to bring a series of airshows across the Arctic, the transformation was staggering. Melting permafrost. Vanishing ice. Shifting ecosystems. What had taken millennia to form was unraveling in half a generation. It shook me. It still does. That’s why I’m as committed to protecting this planet as I am to defending our economy, because in the end, they’re the same damn thing.

And while we’re at it, let’s not underestimate the quiet power beside Carney. His wife, Diana Fox Carney, is no political accessory, she’s one of Canada’s sharpest climate policy minds. Canada doesn’t do First Ladies, but we do have strong women who keep the compass pointed true north. Sometimes literally.

So yes, support Bill C-5. But don’t sleep on it. Don’t let it slide through unchallenged, unread, or untested. Our job is to make damn sure the net underneath isn’t woven out of broken promises and shredded land acknowledgements. Because if we get this wrong, it won’t just be another policy failure, it’ll be a paved-over country with a plaque that says “Unity Project, est. 2025.” I voted for Mark Carney because I believe this bill matters, and because I believe he’s the kind of leader who doesn’t just juggle stakeholders, he actually listens to them. If anyone can walk the line between profit and planet without selling out either, it’s him.

And spoiler alert: You can’t build a One Canadian Economy on a foundation of eroded trust and bulldozed consent.

Here’s a link to the draft bill if you are a policy geek like me. https://www.parl.ca/docume…/en/45-1/bill/C-5/first-reading

June 19, 2025

Posted: July 4, 2025 in Uncategorized

We were driving earlier, talking the way you do when the news feels heavy and the road ahead feels uncertain. And in the quiet my husband suddenly said, “In the animal kingdom, it’s the strongest and smartest who lead the pack. But with humans, especially right now in the U.S.? That doesn’t seem to apply anymore.” And immediately I couldn’t get The Lion King out of my head. And just like that, I knew I was going to have to speak again, to the folks across the border. Because what’s happening there matters. It matters to all of us.

Now, I didn’t grow up with The Lion King, I’m far too old for that. But I do remember sitting in a movie theatre with my older son, watching it unfold as his very first film. Oh and then having to watch the VHS tape almost daily with him. Somewhere along the way, it stopped being a cartoon and started to feel like prophecy.

Because The Lion King isn’t just a children’s tale. It’s a story about power, illusion, betrayal, and the slow rot that happens when the wrong one wears the crown.

It begins, as all stories of kingdoms do, with a king who understands the weight of responsibility. Mufasa tells his young son: “A king’s time as ruler rises and falls like the sun.” That line stayed with me, even back then. Maybe because we all want to believe there’s dignity in passing the torch. That leadership is borrowed, not owned. That strength means wisdom.

And then comes Scar. Scar is charismatic, bitter, clever in all the wrong ways. He manipulates the truth, blames others, and uses fear as currency. He unleashes the hyenas, opportunists who thrive on leftovers and will tear down the land just to keep him in power. And then, in one final moment of pure arrogance, as he lets Mufasa fall to his death, he hisses: “Long live the king.”

It’s hard not to see echoes of that now, not just in one man, but in a movement. In a culture that mistakes cruelty for strength, chaos for strategy, and grievance for governance. Scar doesn’t build anything. He devours.

And here’s the question: Who is Mufasa now? Maybe Mufasa isn’t a single man anymore. Maybe he’s the last shred of leadership that remembers how to serve something bigger than ego. Maybe he’s the memory of leaders like Barack Obama or Ronald Reagan, different ideologies, but both capable of carrying the weight of the office without making it all about themselves.

And Simba? Simba is the American public. The people. The ones who left, who tuned out, who got tired, or disillusioned. The ones who were told to forget, or made to believe that nothing matters anymore. But Simba hears a voice from the past, a whisper that cuts through the noise: “You have forgotten who you are, and so forgotten me.”

That line, that’s where Americans are now. In the in-between. In the moment where remembering who they are is the only way out of this mess.

Because the hyenas are laughing. The land is crumbling. Scar is still on the throne.

And if they don’t remember who they are, not as parties, not as pundits, not as slogans, but as citizens with a responsibility to something bigger, then the sun’s not coming back. Not until someone decides it’s time to fight for the kingdom again.

And if that sounds dramatic, good. Because what we’re watching isn’t politics anymore, it’s a damn fable. And if we don’t turn the page soon, we’re all going to be stuck in the part where the villain wins.

Because let’s be honest: Scar isn’t fictional anymore. He lives in gold-plated towers and screams into social media voids. He feeds on division, hires hyenas to bark on cable news, and claims he’s the rightful king while everything burns behind him.

The hyenas? They’re everywhere, selling merch, stoking rage, rewriting history in real time. They don’t care if the kingdom dies. They only care that they get a seat at the table when the carcass is carved up.

Simba is still lost. Distracted. Waiting for someone else to fix it. But Simba has one job: to remember.

And Mufasa? Maybe he’s not coming back. Maybe this time, you don’t get to be rescued. Maybe this time, you are the ones who have to rise.

Because if Scar gets another sunrise, it won’t be a kingdom he rules, it’ll be a graveyard. And the hyenas will still be laughing.